No official position of the Church on this one. In Acts, Peter fell into a trance/ had a dream about slaughtering and eating some 4 legged animals that were previously forbidden in Jewish Tradition. Then, the Holy Spirit told him some men were coming to see him and to do what they asked. Soon thereafter, the men came and asked Peter to accompany them to their master's house, so he obediently went with them. Their master was a gentile, and Jews were forbidden to go and associate or eat with them, however Peter did so as he had been instructed by the Holy Spirit.

So, possibly you had one of those types of experiences, however the power of suggestion - perhaps subconsciously thinking about something, then dreaming of doing it, then actually doing it could just as easily have occurred. I've had experiences like that, too. I don't think it would be anyting more than either a rare coincidence or something planted in your subconscious and then following through on it later.

Have you ever had a Vuja-De experience....where you are one hundred percent sure that nothing like this has ever happened to you before.

That used to happen to me all the time, especially as a child.
I would dream something very vivid and then the next day it would happen in exact detail. Used to freak me out but my mother told me it happened to her sometimes too.

I'm a psychologist and I think we haven't fully discovered everything regarding our brains. Sometimes it can be a neural glitch and others maybe supernatural. Who knows.

That used to happen to me all the time, especially as a child.
I would dream something very vivid and then the next day it would happen in exact detail. Used to freak me out but my mother told me it happened to her sometimes too.

I'm a psychologist and I think we haven't fully discovered everything regarding our brains. Sometimes it can be a neural glitch and others maybe supernatural. Who knows.

I don't mean to derail the thread, but I wonder if you could answer this question.

My understanding is that It has become known that people who experience road rage, actually chemical imbalances in their brain which causes them to loose control when they experience another driver do something to them, like cut them off.

If this is true, then a person who did such a thing, would not have committed mortal sin, because they did not act will free will.

Some people think that there is a brain malformation, for instance the Frontal Lobe which controls impulses and other parts which control emotion are damaged and the person isn't able to control their anger. This can be helped with medications and therapy to calm the anger.

Others think that this is just an excuse like the "twinkie" defense to allow people to behave poorly without consequences. People can get angry but they should be able to control themselves and make a decision about their behavior.

I have heard a lot about rage disorders and I do think that there may be something to them and that these people need help. People with depression for instance will experience anger that comes out of no where. As with all disorders, I don't think the Catholic church views them as a sin, but people need to seek help once they realize they have a problem. If they realize they have a problem and refuse to seek available help then that might be leaning more towards the sin. Of course I'm not a theologian.

I hope that wasn't confusing. These things can get so complicated when it comes to disorders and emotions.

Some people think that there is a brain malformation, for instance the Frontal Lobe which controls impulses and other parts which control emotion are damaged and the person isn't able to control their anger. This can be helped with medications and therapy to calm the anger.

Others think that this is just an excuse like the "twinkie" defense to allow people to behave poorly without consequences. People can get angry but they should be able to control themselves and make a decision about their behavior.

I have heard a lot about rage disorders and I do think that there may be something to them and that these people need help. People with depression for instance will experience anger that comes out of no where. As with all disorders, I don't think the Catholic church views them as a sin, but people need to seek help once they realize they have a problem. If they realize they have a problem and refuse to seek available help then that might be leaning more towards the sin. Of course I'm not a theologian.

I hope that wasn't confusing. These things can get so complicated when it comes to disorders and emotions.

Hi Marian,
I used to experience deja-vu in my teens. I wonder is it, as has been pointed out by Faustina, a neural configurative?
These days, the closest I get is the same old guff on the radio - dee jay-vu!!
God Bless,
Colmcille.

I was once told that deja-vu is a very mild form of epilepsy- but something which everyone has at some point. I also heard that when we stare, it is also a very mild form of epilepsy, but yet again, everyone has this.

I hope that made sense. I don't know if this is official.

__________________ your enemies: do good to them that hate you: and for them that persecute and calumniate you: That you may be the children of your Father who is in

The best explanation of deja vu that I have ever seen is that it is a function of neural cross-talk.

Back in the days when phone conversations were carried on copper wires, sometimes the magnetic impulses carried by one wire would be picked up on a neighboring wire, and the persons on the second phone line would hear the conversation being carried by the first.

The same thing happens when nerves lie close together--a signal carried by one nerve can be picked up by another. There are several places on my own body that if I scratch them, I feel the sensation there and in another part at the same time.

Now suppose that a sensation is being carried along a nerve to the brain. A neighboring nerve picks up the sensation, and now it is being carried in duplicate. One of the signals get there first and is filed away as a memory. Then the second version of the same signal arrives and is also filed as a memory, but the sensation has already been filed, a flag goes up that says, "I've lived thru this before." Because the time foot print that we live in is about 10-12 seconds long, that's also about how long a deja vu situation lasts.

There is nothing supernatural about it at all; it's only a matter of neural cross-talk.

DaveBj

__________________
Author of The Children of the Maker, Kindle Edition

I had a dream, I usually don't remember my dreams, but I remembered this one because there was a woman walking by in front of me giving me a weird look. She was a little shorter than I, long black hair, a little chubby, with a long loose red sweater.

I wake up that day, went to school, etc. Later on in the evening, out of the blue, I got offered tickets to go see an Ice Skating event and went.

When it was over, I was standing outside waiting for my ride when I realized I had dreamt that street and people etc. Then i thought "The woman with the red sweater!" and as I turned to my right side, she was there. I was in shock, I think I must have been staring with my mouth opened because that's when she gave a weird look like "What's up with her? Why is she staring at me?" as she was passing by. I was speechless for awhile. Just speechless.

I've had other experiences, but I usually try to find some sort of explanation, but sometimes I can't.

I think maybe events in time are set, you know, God already knows what is going to happen, so maybe sometimes our mind wanders a bit and takes a sneak peak.

Although I've had at least one other experience that was like a year into the future and made no sense until it actually happened.